Newspapers / The Danbury Reporter (Danbury, … / April 6, 1882, edition 1 / Page 3
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SEWIP/IPCR LAWS. t. XuWrlber* who do not give express no tice to tl« contrary. are considered a* wish ing to continue their subscriptions. ll' KiilwcriiHir* order the discontinuance of 11 h.' ir iieriodienU, the publisher may con tinue to tend them until all arrearage* arc |>aid. S. If svbacribars neglect or ivl\ise to Like their periodical* from the office to which the* are directed, they arc responsible until they have sottlcd tlwir bili» and ordered lieui di» ticililineil. If subscriber* move to other place*, wiuml informing the publisher, and the paper* are sent to the former addresac*. they are lield responsible. 5. Any person win twelve* a newspaper and inukch use of it. whether he hasorilmvd : It or not. i* held in law to lie a soils liber. I If Mibscriber* pay In advance, thev arc jouiid lo give notice to the pulilUlier at tiie •nd of their time, If they du llot wlih to continue taking the wiper, otherwise the pulillilier is authorized to tend It on, and 'he subscriber will be responsible until ex press notice with payment of all arrears, Is sent to the publisher. Topic* at Home. Some real lovely Spring weather the first of this week. Several shoep were killed by dogs in this neighborhood last week. Thanks for a number of new names to our subscription list this weak. K ister next Sunday. Look out for | rabbit uests with red eggs in them. ) Only four weeks from next Monday till the spring term of Stoke* superior court. The crowd in Danbury Monday was the smallest we have scon here on any Commissioner's day sinoc the war. Pepper k Son* received a lot of beau tiful spring calico and notions. The spring style* in prints are very pretty. Some of our tobacco growers report thai thoy have plauta as largo as a silver dollar. A few say that that the fly is injuring their beds. Married at the residence of the bride's' father, on the 26th ult., by P. H. Mabc, i Ksu., Mr. Win. P. Smith to Miss Sarah C. Nelson, all of Stokes county. The poet-office at Rcidsville has been j made a Presidential appointment with a salary $l,lOO a year. There are al- I ready a number of applicants for the plaoe. | 1 A young man who left this neighbor hood lost fall writes home from the west to a triend bare to tell those who speak I ol Uaving the Old North State to stay! at linuie. | 1 LWt forget the Reportkr and Post office when in need of anything in the . Jib Printing line. We guarantee you the two tilings you desire—aeatucss ana ' cheapness. Mr. J. Y. Phillips, County Superin tendent, requests uifcto state that he will be in Danbury on Thursday, April the 18th, for the purpose of examining ap plicants for public school teachers. 1 1 We are glad lo Icam that the reports we had last week in regard t« a short peach crop aru likely to prove erroneous, ' a? it is believed now that there will be a full crop in most places, if there is no i more cold weather. I ( The wheat crop in this section looks ' very promising indeed, out some farmers say that it is too thick. The usual | quantity of seed having bean put on the ground, and no freexing weather to kill it out, is the staudpoint from which they |' reason. I We learn that the County Cominis- ( sioners delayed action on the fence law question until their next regular meet ing the first Monday in May. Some of ' our people believe that the whole county | will petiti on for an election on the *ub-1, joot at that time. ( At Dr. V. Thompson's drugstore,! l Winston, may be found the largest line i of Trusttea, the greatest variety of gar- i dim seeds, with the best selected stock , of l)ru(s, Paints, Dye-stuffs, Cigars, ( Smoking and Chewing Tobacco to be found in (tie place. It is low down, mean and contempti ble for a county official to use his brief authority to take ravenge on a private individual simply beoanse that individu al won't worship the few dollars held by i one who can do such a thing and than , boast about it. , A. Marks, Boot, Shoe and Harness 1 maker, having located in DauSnry, of- ' fers his services to any and all in need of work in bis line. He guarantees his work to compare favorably with the best workmen in the State, and hop«a to re ceive a liberal patronage. Terms libe- ' ral. | Wa call the attention of our readers , t# the advertisement of J. Monroe Tay-1 1 lor. This house has been established nearly 40 year*, and their poods aru eel- . 1 ebrated far parity and strength, We i would r«c am mend a trial of their Gold i Medal brands to all who want superior , cookery. Don't wear yonr livea o«t, and waste your precious time by using suoh worth less tool* as you have, but when at , Winston atep into 8. E. Allan's, where you will Ind everything you need about . your wagon, your farm, or anything usually kept in a first-class Hardware 1 store, at prioes so low that you can't I help bat bny. , Tha Greensboro Bug It blows loud and long in tha interest at »he tobacco trade ' of that town. Tha Bugte'i head is level on tha tobacco queetion. Nothing builds up a town no fast as tobacoo fac tories, and the wagon trade, whioh they are rare to bring. Tobacco towns above all other* should give (Mir newspaper* i good swpport. | Rev. P. L. Groom will preach in this [ place next Sunday. j The Danbury Union Sunday School > is talking of pictiicking at an early day. - Our force acknowledge the courtesy , of a call from two of Danbury's fair i daughters oitl day this week. The I presence of ladies has a highly mornliting influence upon our young "devil's." Som« of our young ladies are engaged in taking up a subscription to build a | fence around the cliuroh lot in this place I Our citizens should contribute liberally ' of their means to aid in carrying out , this most laudable undertaking. I Memorial day will soon be here, nnd i while other places are making arrange ments to celebrate it, would it not be ' well for Danbury to select a speaker and so pass the day as to do honor to the memory of our loved and lost, and show to th« world that wo have not forgotten our heroic dead. The Commissioners at their meeting Monday appointed the following tax as sessors for the present year : Yadkin Township—J. 0. Newsom. Quaker trap -James A. Leak. | Peters Creek—W. F. Campbell. I Snow Creek—A. J. Brown. | Beaver Island—M. T. Mitchell Xauratown—W. N. Klackburn. ! Meadows—Joel F. Hill. j The Goldsboro Mestenger says of W. iS. O'K. Robinson, who has been nomi nated by tha President for the position I of IT. S. District Attorney for the Eas-j | tern District of North Carolina : "Mr. Uobinsoii is a young lawyer of more i than ordinary ability, and a Republican | j from the cradla up, and not for the sake ' "of office. We feel satisfied he will do the important place full justice and re flect credit upon himself. Mr. Robin- J | son was an elector on the Garfield ticket,' i made an active canvass, and polled the | highest vote on the Republican side in ' the State. We trust his appointment 1 will be confirmed." ' We are glad to know that the associat | ed press telegram published in the Aewf ' i and Observer, Wilmington Star, and! I other State papers, stating that Sheriff j W. A. Estes had been killed while rob-1 | bing his own safe, is utterly false and without any fouudation whatever. Mr.! i Estes says in the first place ha has no I safe, ami if ho had one, it would not i be worth robbing, just at this time while tax money is so hard to get, and that he knew the whole thing from beginning to end was a lie as soon as he heard it. I Where such miserable falsehoods l originate is a mystery to us. Can it be that sn enemy would fabricate such an | unreasonable statement and give it to I the press ! or is it that a friend with ' more brass than brains intended it for a hoax ? It appears now that this wonderful story originated about Henry C. 11., V'a.!, 1 The local paper of that plaoe publishes' a much moro detailed and circumstan- , tial account than that given by the as- ', soaiatcd press. MirTiKN, nuu rixs i, Prom the day* of the true statesman- ; ship of the ('lays, Webster* and Cal-' i liouns, through the dark days of '6l-'65 ; —when the Lacs, Jacksons and Han- j cocks stood up for what they believed to , be right—we have been degenerating, i until now, when we are oxpericncing the :, period of speculation, chicanery an 1 | corruption, and tl-e Vandcrbilts, Goulds, | ! Grants, and a thousand others, would i monopolise the powers of the Govern- , ment by treachery and demagoguism, iu , order to carry out their own private aims j and interests. If there is a step lower I ; than this, where will we land ? Surely , at the dogs or the d—l ! j, AN ATTKWPT AT HIUHWAY ROB- 1 BKHV. I Information was received at this placa a few days ago of an attempt at highway robbery near l'restonville, in this eoun ty, on last Friday evening. It seems that an old man aud hi* wife (the man . being blind) were parsing through the county from Virginia on their way to Alabama. Stopping a few minutes at | l'restonville, they made some small pur chases, when it was noticed by a negro man present named Mose ShufT that they had with them some S4O or SSO iu ioash. After they had left Prcstonville, ! and were proceeding on their way about , a mile below that place, they were over , taken by Shuff, who asked for their j money. They refused to give it .up, | when the negro seised the old woman (who carried the money) and threatened to kill her if she did not hand it over. I The alarm of the old man and bis wife at this juncture was heard by Dr. Peter Mullins, of Patriok county, Va., who happened to be riding along the road near by, when he hurried to the spot from wheuee the ories proceeded and aakad the negro what he meant. With out a word the armad highwayman at one* opened fire on the Doctor. The latter than drew his pistol, and fired four shots at ilia negro m ha mado his eaeape through the woods. The negro, Mose Shuff, lives in tha northern part of (his county, and is said to be a vary duaperate character. REPORTER AND I'OST, DANBURY, N. C., APRIL «. 1882 !»:«»:* EK AC Y IN I'OI.I I'lt M- In an article in the REPORTER ANI POST last week wo alluded to the down ward tendency of the age, as manifestei in political fames. It was not our in tent ion to advise young men to doner the nation or State to greedy politician: or wicked plundereis. The right o franchise is our bulwark of comuioi liberty, and we claim the riglit if a free exercise thereof. Bad men in offict make bad governments, and no on should shut himself from public service when the people seek and require hit services. What wo warned against was tlmt evi spirit which scrambles for public patron age for t'ie subservancc of private ends We cau suggest uo surer way to read that period in American history so mucl hoped for, when the office shall seek the niau than the plan proposed iu our article —for young men to shun politics. And when that period does conic, if ever, there will be honor in office Not until then. Political shrewdness and chica nery arc false promoters to honorable station, and oaunot prove substantial Btays to one thus exalted. Circumstan ces make men of clay ; but true wortli and honest merit are the creators of sub stantial glory—glory which uevor fades. The honest, brainy, straight-forward, quiet, unobtrusive business man is to be the honored and respected uiau of the future. And the great masses will, ere long, soberly consider the needs of the hour, and make liira the loader. He will be sought for his real worth, and not on account of his so-called poetical tact, or peculiar fitness for filthy deeds. A new era appears to be rapidly ap proaching, and it does seem that the ex periences of the-past should have taught this generation and the one just budding, the importance of a change iu the inan ler of bestowing office. A VIRUIXIA W iI'KRMPOI'T. A Francisco correspondent sends us the following aeoonnt of a waterspout in the evening of the 19th ult., in the leighborhood of Peters ('reck, just over the Stokes line : "A terrible storm passed over the neighborhood of Joe Pike, in Patrick county, last Sunday svening which rather surpassed anything A the kind that ever happened in these mountains. Mr. Pike says the rain fell just like it poured out of a spout, and the whole neighborhood was inundated sluiost immediately. One small spring branch rose ten feet in eight minutes, and washed away a cabin houso for J. T. Pike, and five head of cattle for the Pike family, besides nearly all the fen cing off the plantation. Two of the :attle were killed, and the others badly hurt. A young Mr. Pike says it seemed 'ike the two mountains woro jroing to 'hut together, that "trees, logs and >arth started all at once." What was iiost remarkably strange the rain never extended bcy md "Pike's Hollow" in my diroction. 1 guess from the descrip tion given of it, it was what might bo ;alled a waterspout, or a 'youn- flood,' >r 'inuudation of the Pikes.' Mr. J. T. Pike and family and some sompany that happened to be present lecame terribly excited during the itorm, and thinking that the covenant irith Noah had been broken when the ;abin house started off, mado their last jomplinicnts to their Maker, and turned hoir backs on their home with all its ileaaureful surrounding, and started off up the mountain through the rain to look for the highest peak, and when 'early at the top thoy stopped to take thoir farewell glance at the old home Hid waters below, when they saw the raiu bad ceased aud returned to the house is wet as "drowned rats." A similar phenomenon visited the lame neighborhood many years ago, Iraoes of which can now be seen. It is very popular with people, espe cially small minded ones, to 'ndulge in considerable cheap wit about tho defects of newspapers, which of course they liave from the great, influential wealthy oity daily to the smalt struggling coun try weekly. We have seen people throw iown the large dailies with disgust and lay there was nothing in them, when they were crowded with reading matter by the square yard, set in fine type at that: but it waa because the subjeeU did not interest them, or else their pet schemes were not sufficiently puffed up. People t*lk about the triviul items found in country papers, and such is the ease frequently, but oftentimes there is noth ing else to publish. The strong poiut of a country weekly is 1 >cal news ; but many people expect more novels than in a story paper, more telegraphic news than in a metropolitan dailv, more edi torials than in a monthly review, more gossip than in a sewing oirclo, and more tacts than in an unabridged dictionary or a five hundred dollar encyclopedia. However, when a person seos his own name in priut, no matter how small the item, it suddenly becomes important — that is both item and newspaper. A Boston man proposes to start a pa per and oall it th« Unbre/la, because everybody ;,jl ; it. A New Leaf Turned ! PRICES MARKED DOWN! NEW CONCLUSION w. Hauling Against Local Taxes anil High Rents. A DETERMINATION (oSELL AS LOW AS THE LOWEST. V Able to Supply All Demand*. With the beginning of Spring we have marked .l.,wn the prices of our good* to suit the Minus. Having will.' to I lie conclusion tin! of hauling of goods from the railroad to this place is not greater than the local taxes anil high rents paid hv merchants of In corporated towns on railroapa, anil as we buy our goods from same houses, at same price*, that these railroad merchants liuy from, and as we buy mam tilings direct from large maiiuf.utiirera In New York. Philadelphia. Boston ami Baltimore. we can sec no reason why we may not sell goods us low as they crn lie honghr. In am market, where a legitimate business Is done, and correct weights anil measures are ttsod. Our limited means will nut enable us lo earrv in stock the .-re.it variety and complete 1 assortments to be found iu place-, with ten or fifteen stores, but u|h>ii short notice ».• can furnish anything the needs of this country demand. To aeooiunuMlate all class*** we til buy 1 Country Produce Of every kind at full nmrkot prices, and Tobacco Being a Specialty with ii*, we want and will nav cash for I 250,000 POUNDS (if I/af ranging in qualify from fin* and good manufacturing and smoking to the lowest ■ grades. Tendering our tlianks to a «enerous public for ihe liberal patronage given during the twelee years silica we commm-ed business. and Willi tic j romiseonour part that we will try ami merit a continuance «»f the same by low prices ami fair dealing we are Very Ue.sjMvtfully Panbury, N. C., March Ist, 1882. PKi'PEIt ft SONS. I , . THEiCREAT Unfailing j specific Y FOR LIVES COMPLAINT. Thf N Y.HPI ONM of LI V»:K ( ONPL4IXT I are uneasiness and pain In the side, sometimes I pain in ilie shoulder, ami Is mistaken for rhcuuia ' tisra; the Stomach is arte*tod with I.»M or appe | tite ii ml nick lie**; bowel*, In general, costive, . aometlme* alternating with lux ; the head In trou j hied with pain and dull, heavy sensation of hav ing left updhnc something which ought t«» Imve '! been lone ; often complamg ot weakness, tv ami low *plrit». Sometime* many of the nl>ove sVmptoms attend the disease ami at other tune* very few of them -dut the liver la geherslly the organ moat Involved. Regulate the Liver and Prevent Wyapepala, Conatlpntloii. Jnniidlce. Hil ton* Attueka, till IIK wild lever. Heartache, Colic l>.pre**J »u of Nalrlla. Motir Nluiaaeh, ■ It-artbum, I*ll CM, etc i Tome, Jl Iterative ami Cainartxc! Simmou* Liver Regulator, purely vegetable, in ' the medicine generally used in tlie south to arouse the torpid Liver to healthy aetlon. \ It acts with extraordinary power and efficacy on the Liver and Kidneys. The aetlhn of the Regulator if free from nau sea or griping. It U m »*t in starting the secretion* hi the Liver, cau*lng the bile to art a* a cathartic. When there la an exeexaof Idle In the Stomach, the Regulator is an active purge; j after the removal of the bile it will regulate the h>*eli* and Impart vigor aud health to the whole system. See that you get the Genuine In White Wrap per, with red Z. prepared only by J. H. Zeiliu & Co. Mold by all Prugglsts. liruiv ! 1-"LI IST! IK you wimt to MihmTitx. At tho Funniest n«'ws|M[K'rs published in tin* Noutb, send | "iU cent* to Tlie Southern Humorist, ( 'ni iiit.li, | Mississippi, for a year's subscription. .Seiut for a sampio cop) . Agents make big money | working I'or its—send lor terms. NHKKT* k PATTow, Proprietors. CMnMiiinption Cured. An old physician. retlrlngTrnro active practice, having had placed In hla hand* bv am Ka«t India Mlaalouarv the formula of a ftfmple vegetable i remedy for the a|*eedv and permanent cure of ; Consumption, Hronchitla, Catarrh, Asthma, and all Throat ami Lung affection.-, also a poaitiveand radical cure for general Oebilitv ami all nervous complaint* after having thoroughly teated it* won derful curative power* in thousand* of cane*, feels it hla duty to make it known to hi* sutlcring fellow*. The recipe will be neat free of charge to all who desire It. with full direction* for pre paring and successfully using. Every p/.tient I* also entitle*! to a eopy ftee of "THE COMPI.KTK 1 Pm YMICI AN." a work of nearly 900 page*, con taining over IflOO formula* The latent and Heat family Medical work out. Addreaa, with stamn, .or stamped self addrefeed envelope, On. M. K. 1 HFI.L, lai N. Calvert St., HALTIMOKR, Mn. | Dec. M-'Ht-ly. ■% Great chance to make mnncv :■■ ■■ ■ | ■ 'flu MM* who alwaya take advan n||| Ifl-tagc of the KIHMI chances for %J| %m mm M 0 I making money that are offered generally become wealthy, while those who do 1 not Improve such ehancea remain In poverty. We want many men, women, boy* and girl* to' work for UN right In thetr own toealltle*. Any one ean do the work properly from the tret atart. The bnslneee will pay m-re than ten time* ordinary wage*- Kxpenalve outfit furnished free. No one who engages fall* to make money rapidly. You I can devote your whole time te the work, or only your *pare memento. Full Information und all that I* needed *ent free. -Add:cm 9TINMON & ' CO., . - . ae. I Germanton Institute. An English and] Classical School Fori HOYS AND GIRLS. Prepares for College ami business life. The course of atudy embrace* English, Greek, Latin. German, Mathematics, lh»ok keeping. Natural Philosophy. CheiniNtrv, and Itotauv. SPKCIAI attention given to the fcnglish branches. Tuitlhn (live month*) «7.1 to fW.UO I Hoard, per month ti.no •• B.tlO | A Uni ted number of Mtudeut* can obtain board with the Principal. For circular*, address H. L- IIU AI>FII£LI>, principal, j tiermantoii. Stoke* Co., N. C. j Methodist Protestants, PROTESTANT RECORDER, 1M 'RI.IKIIKD AT MAGNOLIA, ARKANSAS. The PKHTKHTANT RXOOKOICK has now been In I existence two year*, ami l>y circulation and repu- 1 tation if* the acknowledged cvponont of Methodist j Protestantism in the MouthwcNt. It make* ear- ' neat, vigoron* appeals in ladialt of our church, gotal inhraht ami Chri*tlamt), and ih a reliable ami valuble church paper. AM both an Aikan *a* and Te*a* department, ami gl ve* nil the latent ' church uewM in the .South and Wcat, be*idea a , full supply of gen»r*l literature. Wo wish to rntrhduce Tita PKOTEITANT KK- ; OMNI Into tlie femtlj t ever) Methodlat Prot estant, mid. therefore will *end it |x>f>tpni«l from now until the Hr.st day of January iwti. for i»mk I I)OLI,AU. No uiiuiMter who bcl oig* to our church either local or travelling, canaltord to be without ! it. 'J'e«me who semi us live Miihecrthcra nhw, with ; 9A enclONOd, will receive an evtra copy «.t the pa- ; |H>r until tJanuarv, IW. A«k the members of your ehurch to join your club, mud direct vour | order* to PROTESTANT PL'HLIHIIfNG CO., I 2m Itox 30. Magnolia, Ark. ; FARMERS, LOOK HERE! Make Your Own G-uano i Shun thew guano dealer*, ami manufacture j your own fertilTxerN. Most or the material la on ] your farm* ami ea*y to he had, aud the balance j can be had at your nearest town. Olie receipt tor quickly manufacturing guano I far better than the spurious *tuft sold by utiHcru- ! I pulou* dealers, wiM be mailetl to you on receipt of ONE DOLLAR. The direction;! are »imi»ln, uo tool* or apparatus needed hcsldcN what a farmer alrendv lias, and ! the cmtt dee* not exceed TKHKK hol.LAlt.S per ton. Three hundred |>ounda put U|Min an acre i will uiake * better crop than any guano yon an buy. Semi your order ami one dollar by mail, at mv riek, with |HMto(hce pluiiuv written, to it..». KI>KNFIFLI>. Swainsboro, Ga. , ■m ■■ imm Uusincs* now before the public. II V I You can make money faster at I work lor us than at anything ■ else. Capital not needed. We willl start you. 912 a day and upward* made at : home b) the imln«triou». Men. women, bonMMl 1 girls wanted everywhere to work for us. Sow i* , tlie time. You can work In spare time only or give your whole time to the buslnesa. You 'eau I Uve at home ami do the work. No other bustc will |>ay your m>arly a* well. No one can fail to , make enormous pay by s ngagiug at once. Ca>stly > Outfit aud terms free. Money mada faat, eaaily. ' and honorably, lbldren* Tut'C Co., Augusta. Maine, a week In your own towu. fA OntHt 1 90 No risk. Kverythltig new. Cap-t ital test re(iiiied. vVe will fummh you every thing. Many ale making fortune*. Ladles make as much MM men. and boys ami girls make great ( pay. Header, if AOM want a business at which I you can make great t»ay all thr time you work, j write for partlonlarx to HALI.KTT A Co., Pert- | land, Maine. s7l A WBKK. 9>2 a dav at home caally iwole. Costly outfit free Trite & *o., Augusta, Maine. DAaUw'n '*igana3T Stop* 10 Set Heeds only ' JjwaVvJr 2 W Piaaos 912 ft np. Rare Hof- | Iday Indu. emeiu Ready. SVrite or call e» Ht at- • ty, wa«hlm«»v| 4\.w. 4. J. ijttun.i. VV.JJ OAttiKH.J*. J K. fictius. itlt KJtjU uj^iAAbLH BROWN'S WAREHOUSE, The Farmers' Headquarters, The Leading House as usual since October Ist. I 'ln QUANTITY of TOBACCO SOLD, in PRICES and in DIBPATCH BUSINESS. Farmers du nnt have to wait until alter the sale for their checks, BUT AUK PAID AS SOON AS THKIR TOBACCO IS SOLD. Remember this, when you want to get off early and breaks are heavy. HIGHEST PRICES ALWAYS GUARANTEED. P. A. WII.SON, JR., Hook-keeper. 11. D. MUSKLKY, Auctioneer. T. J. BROWN & CO, W ins too, N. C. BROWJN & UARTER, (SUCCESSORS TO J F. PRAT (IE R & CO'S), Next door Jto Brown, Rogers & Co.'s Hardware Store, s KKItr CONSTANTLY ON 11 AN D A WKLL BKLKCTLU STOCK Of Dry- Go o ds, Groceries, Boots, Shoes, Hats, Notions, Ac. We especially invite our country friends to call on us, as our purohises aro mads with special reference to their wants, and WILL SELL AT BOTTOM PRICKS. F. J. BROWN, Kebiuary 3. 1881 W B. CARTER Ja. OItAY Ac MARTIN THIRD STREET, WINSTON, N. C. DRUGS, MEDICINES, Perfumes, Tobaccos, Cigars, Soaps, Paints and Oils. TRUSSES LAMPS AND LAMP GOODS. j GRAVES'S WAREHOUSE, DANVILLE, VIRGINIA. FOR TIIK SALK OK LEAF TOBACCO. KI.OOR MANAGER : JOSEPH 11. BLACK WELL, of K >citiii;ha(ii*County, N. C. ASSISTANT FLOOR MA NAG Kit : A. N. CKOWDEII, of JiallCMX County, Va. A L OTION KER : GEOIIGK KD COLEMAN, of Pittsylvania County. CI.KRK : J NO. A. HEKNDON, of Pittsylvania Couuty, Va. ASSISTANT CLERK : STEPHEN T. NEAL, of Caswell, N. C. 1 Thankful for the liberal patronage given tne for many years, I shall endeavor to merit it in ihe future 'VILLIAM P. GRAVES. Noveujber,«3, 1831 y 1 Proprietor. - - - - - Jt GHEAT ATTHACTION AT— GEO. M. RUCKEK & ( O S STORE. OUTOHKR lf»tn, 1881. Mr. GEO. M. KUCKKR has just returned from the North with a very large slock |of all kinds of Fine, Fancy aud Staple Dry Goods, Hats, Shoes, &.j and u general !stock of GROCERIES. HEADQUARTERS For all kinds of choice Dress Goods, Dress Trimminps, Notions. frc If you wan to see the prettiest goods—and cheap too—you have ever p«en, go to GEO. M, RUCKER & CO S 1 And you will 6ud everytl ing you want at Low Prices, and Newest Styles r>f Fi ie | Goods. Wj n ston, N O , Novcmbor 3rd, 1881 yl ' - THE UNITED STATES MAIL SEED STORE >yC3».To evenfman's door. If our SEEDS are not sold In your Postal Card for _i7B4. *- Handsome Illustrated Catalogue and Prices. Address D. LANDRETH a SONB. Philadelphia. mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmammmmmm ommmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmr J. W. RANDOLPH k RiWIJSiI, : dOOKSRLLBRH, i*TATIONKKS, AN I BLANK-BOOK MANUKAL'TKURRH. # 1318 Mnlnrtreet, Richmond. ; .4 I.argt Stork of LA W BOOKS alwayt on | iol-6m hand. w ilhon, B; srtis a «#., A'HOL.KSALtt UROO'IM AND OONNIB BION MKROHANTS. I So 8 Howard atreet, vomer olliombard; BALTIMOHR. i W« keep conatantly on hand a large and : well aaaorted slock of Grocrriet—luitahle lor i Southern and Mi eatern trade. We tnllrll con lignnienla ot Country Produce—»uth aa Oot I ton; Feotliera; (Jihsetig; Uwtawax; Wool; Urt«d i Fruit; > ura; gkini, tic. Uur tacililiei lur do ' ing huiiueaaare luch a* to warrant quicktalea 1 and prompt rvtuiut. All urderi will hateoai 1 niiMtton. ' 'v. EAtiLE wARE 110 PRE FOR TUB SALS OF I.F.AF TOBACCO. HUDSON i UcDBARIIAN. Propiirtora. Bun LIOIITS AND ACCOMMODATION*. Wt guarantee to our frienda polite atten tion and tht highest price? For their Totmcro. Nor 3,'81-tfto DAM VII.LE VA. Robert O. Galloway, Jr., with STERN & CO., WIIOI.KBA I.K Boots and Shoes, XJ. 9 GOVERNOR BTRKKI, stb Door Iroui Main, •(7 11.6 R1('U!:' ,V *» V
The Danbury Reporter (Danbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 6, 1882, edition 1
3
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